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Paperback Creative Journal Writing: The Art and Heart of Reflection Book

ISBN: 1585426865

ISBN13: 9781585426867

Creative Journal Writing: The Art and Heart of Reflection

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Winner of the COVR Award for Book of the Year (2007) From the #1 creativity publisher in the country comes our latest creativity bestseller-- Creative Journal Writing-- the ultimate book for those who... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Must have for writers of all ages and all stages

I've been writing since I was in junior high, writing short stories and poetry - and keeping a journal. Any writer - no matter how old you are or what you like to write - can benefit from keeping a journal. This book gives you the inside scoop on journaling: it's not what you write, how you write it, or even where you write it - the main objective is that YOU JUST WRITE. The book gives examples of real peoples' journals and lots of helpful insights and tips. I love this book!

Creative Writing Journal review

As an editor I get tired of asking my authors to practise their writing. Some like to play the victim, `But I don't have the talent. It just doesn't come easy.' And I have to remind them: even the writing of seasoned writers doesn't always come easy. As with any skill people have to practise. In my mind there's no such thing as a natural-born writer. Or if there is, it's only because they've written thousands of pages, and they now finally write with ease. Many of my would-be writers purchase books about publishing. They favour titles such as How to Get Published or How to Get off the Slush Pile. As an editor and writing teacher I never suggest such books. For good reason. This is because getting published to me is like coming to the end of a very long road. You have to get bindies in your feet and collect experience along the way, before you get to your destination. And to state the bleeding obvious, to be a writer you have to write. And you have to write a lot before your sentences sparkle. But many authors have trouble getting past the first page. They often say to me, `But this is going to be my magnum opus, my Great Australian Novel.' No wonder they fail! From page 1 they place enormous pressure on themselves to write this great thing. If I had a dollar for every poem, short story or novel that I read starting with `The white page is mocking me' I'd be sporting diamond-encrusted flip-flops, sunning myself on the beaches of the Mediterranean. This is why I often suggest to authors that they read and work through Stephanie Dowrick's Creative Journal Writing. Dowrick challenges people (not just writers) to reframe that blank page as an invitation. She calls it `a door or window opening or falling away'. Once people see the page as a place to free emotions and thoughts, new adventures can arise. Then you no longer have to be the writer, the great composer, the brilliant anything. You can just be yourself. In a journal the writing is not for publication, competition, or public consumption. Journal writing is the perfect place to start your journey. But what do I write about? You may be crowded with a thousand thoughts. Or perhaps you put your pen down, and then your mind turns to mush. Dowrick's book is filled with ideas for writing, topics, tricks, ideas. Each chapter contains simple exercises that any person can do. So for example Dowrick includes a free-association exercise. She offers up the suggestions of catching a lift and focussing on a smell: perhaps someone walking in with a coffee, or someone is wearing your aunt's favourite perfume. What do these smells evoke in you? What memories do they bring up? When you read Dowrick's book you realise that it's no longer just you and the blank page mocking you. She presents a whole host of ideas that would spark even the most unimaginative person to fill a book. If you're going to write for others you first need to write for yourself. Throughout the book Dowrick entreats us to `retire t

Creativity=freedom in these pages

Writing should be at least as pleasurable as reading and yet for so many people it isn't. This is a book that seems set to bring back some of the joy in writing that many would-be everyday writers have lost. It is filled with stories, exercises, writing games, humor and insight across all the many areas of journal writing. It is particularly strong on how to write "freely" in ways that I know would help other kinds of writing - creative and "workplace". The author has taught writing and worked in publishing for many years and is a successful writer herself. She is confident that virtually everyone can learn to write more expressively. Given how stuck, forced or dried up many would-be writers feel out here in the real world, these liberating writing techniques are essential to what most us seem to want to discover. This book is about finding "your own voice"- and trusting it. Creativity = freedom in these pages. More important to my mind is that it is journal writing in particular that more than any other kind of writing will let you discover your own voice and your own way to write and express without fear of any outer or inner critic telling you how you should be writing. I loved the variety of experiences shared here. The many quotes are mostly from ordinary journal writers whose snapshot views of the world and of the place of journal writing within it vary from Dieter who sees his life through numerical correspondences (amazing number sequences), to Jessica, who uses her journal as a way out of the prison of panic attacks, Michele, an artist with Crohn's disease whose journal writing helps in managing chronic illness and Helen who writes of the solace that journal writing has given her following a marriage breakdown. There are also many examples of using your journal to help you make decisions and review options and generally for "left-brain" strategies, planning etc. I particularly appreciated this! Others may love the sections on learning to record and "see" your own spiritual story.

Creative Journal Writing

I will have to admit that I am a much better reader than I am a writer. Reading has always been my love. I have tried to keep a journal, but have never been very good at following through with it. This book may be my turning point. Stephanie Dowrick has put together a book that will help even the most reluctant journaler, like me. She divides the book into 5 parts: Getting Started, Free to be Creative, Writing the Facts, Your Life in Your Journal, and Putting it all Together. Throughout the book are excerpts from other journals, so that you can really see what it is she is talking about. It's one thing to read about it, but another to see a real-life example. Also scattered throughout the book are timely writing quotes. At the very beginning of the book is a half page note from Stephanie titled, How to use this book. I think it's pertinent to share with you. "One of the essential ingredients of creative journal writing is freedom: freedom from judgments, freedom to write as you wish and only about what interests you. How you will use this book is, necessarily, entirely up to you. But my humble suggestion is that you first read it through like a conventional book, stopping only if an exercise here or there grabs you by the ankle and pulls you to the ground. Stop here. If that doesn't happen, experience the ideas and the many wonderful stories as a whole, and only then go back to work your way through it far more personally, engaging with all the exercises that you want, at the pace you want, and in the way you want. Pleasure is the other essential ingredient of journal writing . So use this book in the way that will give you the most pleasure: reading, writing, pausing, setting aside, returning, all at a pace and in a rhythm entirely of your own making. The way she suggests is exactly the way I approached this book. I simply read for pleasure, taking in all the stories, key principles, suggestions, instructions, etc. My goal now, is to go back, a little at a time, and take it all in as I put the suggestions, hints, and ideas into practice in my own journal. Included with the review copy of this book was my very own Creative Writing Journal, but any journal you choose could be used. My favorite part of this book were the 125 possible topics to write about. Stephanie suggests instinctively choosing a number between 1 and 125 and just writing about it, whether you like it or not. I will definitely be going to the list more than once as I embark on my journaling expedition. Creative Journal Writing is a great way to get started with journaling, or a way to dig deeper into your journaling experience. Whether or not you're a writer, I encourage you to give it a try. You never know, you might like it!
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